The historic tension between freedom and in the Nuevo Reino de Granada constitutes a challenge for current historiography that attempts to trace the study of systems of slavery. This article, as an initial reflection, proposes discarding unilateral visions that project freedom and as two historically separate entities. It proposes instead the concept of the discursiveness of slavery as the transversal variable that would relate the everyday phenomena of slavery, the parasitic dependence of slaveowners, and the resistence mechanisms of the enslaved and the indentured, among other things. Within this scenario, two central dynamics are proposed: freedom in and in freedom.